DANGER
Mix of Bleach with Acid causes toxic fumes!
Mix of Bleach with Ammonia causes toxic fumes!
What cleaners need to know
According to McGill University in Canada, you never want to mix cleaning products that contain bleach (such as Clorox, which has sodium hypochlorite) with ones that contain acid , which is found in toilet bowl cleaner(the same goes for bleach and ammonia (Urine) , which is found in glass and window cleaners.)
“Bleach is a solution of sodium or calcium hypochlorite. When mixed with any acid, it releases highly toxic chlorine gas,” states McGill University. “Most toilet bowl cleaners contain sodium hydrogen sulfate, an acid which will quickly liberate chlorine from bleach. The acrid fumes of chlorine can destroy lung tissue, cause the lungs to fill with water and in a sense cause death by drowning.”
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has a list of household products that contain sodium hypochlorite. “No acid (mint bowl cleaner & Crew) must ever be mixed with chlorine bleach,” according to the university. “This includes acidic drain cleaners, rust removers and even vinegar.”
On Thursday, November 8, 2019 at Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant in Burlington, Mass., a worker was cleaning the kitchen floor using a cleaning agent, called Super 8, which contains sodium hypochlorite — a disinfectant and bleaching agent that’s a more potent form of chlorine. What the worker didn’t realize is that an “acid-based cleaning agent” had already spilled on the floor, reports Time. When the Super 8 cleaning agent was poured on top and the worker started to scrub the floor, it created a toxic chemical reaction.
The worker fled the kitchen, complaining of burning eyes, while the general manager used a squeegee to try to remove the cleaning agent.
“That’s when he was exposed to it. It was probably an immediate reaction to the product,” assistant Burlington fire chief Michael Patterson told Time. Firefighters and paramedics then arrived on the scene, and the building was evacuated, with customers complaining of watery eyes and difficulty breathing. But it was too late for the manager. “We knew the guy was in trouble,” Patterson said.
The manager was taken to the hospital, where he later died
From reports, it appears that Super 8 alone didn’t cause the problem — rather, it was the toxic chemical reaction that happened once Super 8, which is a bleaching agent, mixed with the acid-based cleaning product that had already been on the restaurant’s kitchen floor.
Mix of Bleach with Acid causes toxic fumes!
Mix of Bleach with Ammonia causes toxic fumes!
What cleaners need to know
According to McGill University in Canada, you never want to mix cleaning products that contain bleach (such as Clorox, which has sodium hypochlorite) with ones that contain acid , which is found in toilet bowl cleaner(the same goes for bleach and ammonia (Urine) , which is found in glass and window cleaners.)
“Bleach is a solution of sodium or calcium hypochlorite. When mixed with any acid, it releases highly toxic chlorine gas,” states McGill University. “Most toilet bowl cleaners contain sodium hydrogen sulfate, an acid which will quickly liberate chlorine from bleach. The acrid fumes of chlorine can destroy lung tissue, cause the lungs to fill with water and in a sense cause death by drowning.”
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has a list of household products that contain sodium hypochlorite. “No acid (mint bowl cleaner & Crew) must ever be mixed with chlorine bleach,” according to the university. “This includes acidic drain cleaners, rust removers and even vinegar.”
On Thursday, November 8, 2019 at Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant in Burlington, Mass., a worker was cleaning the kitchen floor using a cleaning agent, called Super 8, which contains sodium hypochlorite — a disinfectant and bleaching agent that’s a more potent form of chlorine. What the worker didn’t realize is that an “acid-based cleaning agent” had already spilled on the floor, reports Time. When the Super 8 cleaning agent was poured on top and the worker started to scrub the floor, it created a toxic chemical reaction.
The worker fled the kitchen, complaining of burning eyes, while the general manager used a squeegee to try to remove the cleaning agent.
“That’s when he was exposed to it. It was probably an immediate reaction to the product,” assistant Burlington fire chief Michael Patterson told Time. Firefighters and paramedics then arrived on the scene, and the building was evacuated, with customers complaining of watery eyes and difficulty breathing. But it was too late for the manager. “We knew the guy was in trouble,” Patterson said.
The manager was taken to the hospital, where he later died
From reports, it appears that Super 8 alone didn’t cause the problem — rather, it was the toxic chemical reaction that happened once Super 8, which is a bleaching agent, mixed with the acid-based cleaning product that had already been on the restaurant’s kitchen floor.